
Itβs not every day a telecommunications fiant plays a part in releasing a cookbook, rarer still one βinspiredβ by AI.
Yet this is precisely what Vodafone, in partnership with researchers from Imperial College London and ched Jozef Youssef, has done with .
The project involved devising recipes using ingredients understood to have βdisease-beating propertiesβ, based on findings from Imperial Collegeβs DRUGS project. DRUGS used AI and machine learning to identify the molecules in foods such as carrots, celery, oranges, grapes, coriander, cabbage, turmeric and dill that help fight diseases.
Dr Kirill Veselkov, lead computational scientist at Imperial College London, said in : βWe are seeing a continuous growth in chronic conditions, such as cancer, neurological diseases and heart disorders. A key contributing factor is poor diet; studies suggest that unhealthy diets are responsible for a fifth of deaths globally and itβs estimated that almost half of all cancers could be prevented by good dietary and lifestyle choices.β
The research made use of Vodafoneβs app, which leverages mobile phone processing power to speed up scientific research. While phones are being charged, the app aggregates the processing power of phones with the app installed to create a cloud supercomputer.
Helen Lamprell, Vodafone Foundation Trustee and General Counsel & External Affairs Director, Vodafone UK, said: βTechnologies such as AI have the potential to create a smarter healthcare system and improve outcomes for patients. We are hugely proud that DreamLab has played such an important role in Imperialβs research project and in the development of this collection of recipes.β
While AI and food may not seem the most natural of bedfellows, there are nevertheless a number of companies looking to bring AI to bear on the subject of food. , for instance, uses AI to create recipes out of the ingredients you have immediately available to you by learning from flavour combinations to create new recipes.Β